For the longest time, people have been planning their vacations by walking into a well-stocked room surrounded by maps and brochures. Greeted by an agent offering a cup of coffee, they would begin the discussion about budgets and desired experiences. When online travel agencies started slowly but surely replacing traditional shops in 2005, Internet-adept travelers had learned to book their trips on their home PC. And now it seems like no one ever visits brick-and-mortar agencies anymore. But that’s far from truth.

A recent study shows that offline agents save customers $452 per trip. Along with cost saving, travelers spend less time researching – a process that often takes days and a dozen visited websites. Travel agents also still dominate cruise and tour sales. Research Travel Agents vs. Online Booking showed that about 65 percent of American respondents prefer booking international trips with an agent, even if they think online booking is cheaper. Many travelers feel more secure planning with an expert than using self-service websites.

Still, the convenience of using OTAs often tends to overpower travel agencies’ appeal. Undeniably, there’s still a market for good, old travel agents. But it doesn’t mean that current agencies should do business the same way they did decades ago. Digital transformation is shifting the focus and allowing companies to combine the benefits of travel agents with the convenience of self-service platforms. In this article, we’ll talk about how traditional travel agencies can use technology to improve operations, automate, and customize their processes today.

For many travel agents, their work is not synonymous with adventure and exploration

To see where exactly a travel agency is positioned in the travel distribution flow, check out two handy infographics we created for airline management and hotel distribution. Basically, a travel agency is one of the contact points for (usually leisure) travelers that helps them choose and organize a trip. This includes hotel and flight bookings, transfers, activities, excursions, etc. Previously, we’ve talked a lot about online travel agencies but today we tackle physical stores where people come to speak to a human agent and entrust them with all the planning. We also focus on leisure travel since managing corporate travel operations takes other forms, such as hiring a travel management company, handling travel and expense management, or using self-service solutions.

So, travel agencies are usually in need of a few types of software, each for a specific function. Traditionally, a travel agency would be engaged in various activities besides booking hotels and flights. Day-to-day operations of a typical travel agent usually include scheduling, tour program creation, consultation services, activities booking, vendor negotiation, creating personalized tours, and finding the best fare for a client’s budget. Of course, all of this doesn’t have to be done by hand or in Excel spreadsheets. There are already specialized online solutions on the market. We grouped these solutions into four travel agency software types and reviewed a few players to get agents more familiar with the alternatives.

Booking and reservation software

Today most travelers have no problem booking their hotels themselves. It’s so easy and convenient! There are price aggregators that give you the best price on the market in seconds, even tools that predict prices using historical data. There are even chatbots that do that for you. So for many people, human agents lose their appeal because they often use the same websites a client can comfortably use. This isn’t ideal.

When you’re using a specialized travel booking software, you get access to the back office and can connect your bookings to the accounting service, receive reports, create invoices, and much more. In fact, standard features for booking and reservation software include:

GDS connectivity

Booking confirmations

Automatic billing

Payment system integration

Ability to add custom discounts

Third-party suppliers integration

Here we’ll review a few players on the market to give you a better idea of what’s available.

Bookinglayer: Real-time Dashboard and Customer-Facing Portal

Bookinglayer provides software for traditional and online travel agencies. It has a user-friendly platform that gives you access to accommodations, activities, rentals, and packages, automatically shows prices in different currencies, applies discounts to your loyal customers, and syncs data with Booking.com or Airbnb. Client management also becomes automated and you have a built-in CRM, a customer portal enabling travelers to see information about their departures and arrivals, and update information. It also has an installed payment mechanism with customized surcharges.

Bookinglayer’s back office interface

Lemax: Much More than Hotels and Flights

Among its numerous solutions, Lemax offers booking and sales software both for B2B and B2C models. Integrated with Travelport, Galileo, and Amadeus GDSs, it allows you to add not only flights, hotels, and rentals, but also excursions, vessels, cruises, and more. Its main advantage is customization and universality – Lemax API can be used pretty much for any travel booking operation, from conference organization to group tours.

Lemax online booking platform

PHPTravels: Rich in Modules and Open Source

PHPTravels is useful for its modules. Whether you need hotel, car, flight, or tour booking, you can use each module separately and enrich your already existing solution. It’s 100 percent open source, meaning you can employ developers to customize the tool to your liking. They also provide the code for your mobile application and you can test out the demos on their website.

Dolphin: Full Back-Office for Smaller Businesses

Just like its competitors, Dolphin provides back-office support for reservations, sales, and customer communication. They also offer solutions for business travel agents with integrated company and client profiles and other functions for commercial relationships.

Dolphin software product presentation

Accounting software

Most reservation tools that we listed above provide some form of finance management for travel agencies already. However, any business that has to do something with sales, employs a very complex accounting system, and separate functions are not comprehensive enough for the travel business. Just some of the must-have features a travel agency accounting platform should include:

Invoicing

Inventory management and tracking

Connection to banks

Bank reconciliations

Data security

Travel agent commission management

Sales analysis

Supplier data handling

Now, let’s quickly review what the market has to offer in the accounting for travel agencies.

Xero: Secure and Feature-Rich

Xero is a cross-platform accounting service that offers three pricing plans for different business needs. All basic features are available in each plan. These includes invoicing, mobile access via Android and iOS apps, connection to bank accounts, and secure SSL encryption. Xero is a good fit for travel agencies, hotels, and hostels. It works with more than 160 currencies and can be integrated with third-party tourism apps.

Xero’s offerings and interface demo

TravelWorks: BSP-ARC Support and Group Planning

TravelWorks allows you to easily control travel agent commissions, even in complex cases, such as sharing commissions between different agents. Usually, all US agencies have to be accredited by Airlines Reporting Corporation (ARC) or Billing Settlement Plans (BSP) for agencies outside of the US. TravelWorks supports BSP-ARC management and exception reporting that automatically identifies errors. It also simplifies group planning with templates.

OnlineInvoices: Profits Calculation and Performance Monitoring

Targeted at companies in all sectors, OnlineInvoices also offers advanced features to travel agencies. You can send invoices to tourists and partners via email and receive payment by credit card, PayPal, Stripe, or bank transfer. You can analyze travel data to locate the most popular hotels and sights and assign each agent to accomplish specific tour services as well.

Tour building

Designing tours is one of the most time-consuming operations in a travel agency. It requires booking, planning, scheduling, pricing – all considering the most popular, budget, or unique inventory for each location. Thankfully, there is software for this. A typical tour builder would include:

Inventory system integration

Supplier confirmation

Tour publishing tools

Tour templates

Insights and reporting

So, which tools on the market can help agents design tours?

TripСreator: AI-Driven with Built-In Inventories

TripCreator helps operators design tours for the website and custom tours for each client. Here you get a database of thousands of inventories for suggestion and inspiration, but your offline inventories are also available. They use AI to give personalized recommendations on the itinerary, optimize the time and schedule so travelers spend less time driving and more time experiencing. TripCreator also validates dates, opening hours, or driving distance. You can even send a tour back to your client and allow them modify it themselves.

Tour designing process in Tripcreator

Tourwriter: Data-Driven Insights Fit for All Budgets

Another tool wired for tailor-made experiences, Tourwriter provides three pricing plans, targeted at either solo agents, small agencies, or enterprise-level companies. Each plan allows you to create an unlimited number of itineraries and clients, but the number of suppliers is limited in the first and second tiers. The highest tier is enabled with groups and accounting modules, and gives access to APIs. See their product presentation on the video below.

Tourwriter product demo

Orioly: Specific Experiences and Handy Tutorials

Orioly is a cloud-based tool created for bike, brewery, wine, Segway, trekking, food tours, and even escape rooms. It has a simple, user-friendly activity creation tool and handy tutorials right on their website. Here you can create, publish, and sell excursions in just one user experience flow. This allows small, specialized tour agencies to promote and distribute their services, process payments, and manage inventories on one platform. The software does however have fees for each agent and affiliate booking. A free trial, documentation, and tutorials allow you to try it before you buy it.

Activity creation on Orioly

CRM systems

How is travel customer relationship management different from any other? Why can’t you use one of the traditional solutions from Zoho, HubSpot, or Salesforce? Every industry has marketing properties that can’t be covered by one universal tool. So, what to look for in a travel CRM system?

Zoho’s Travel Agency CRM: Comprehensive Tool from an Industry Leader

One of the biggest CRM providers, Zoho has a targeted Travel Agency CRM with features beneficial for companies selling travel services. Here you’ll find a lead capturing machine that gets all inquiries made via your website directly into a CRM with the ability to distribute them among your agents. You can also set up quota templates that get sent out to customers according to your own rules. Zoho also simplifies passenger handling, allowing you to classify them accodring to their role.

Zoho Travel Agency CRM interface

LeadSquared Travel CRM: Exhaustive Marketing Software

LeadSquared provides marketing software for all businesses, but it also has a specific CRM and marketing solution for travel brands. Its travel product is divided into three functions: travel marketing, package sales, and partner management. So, besides CRM function, it automates all marketing and sales tasks and manages leads. Detailed reports, customized dashboards, lead distribution based on trip location and budgets… LeadSquared covers a lot.

LeadSquared’s travel marketing solutions

Kapture Travel CRM: Automatic Itineraries and Travel Sales Tunnel

Besides basic customer profiles and interaction, Kapture creates itineraries semi-automatically and directly in a CRM. The sales funnel here is also customized for travel agencies and allows you to track clients from their interest in a vacation to the booking itself. Kapture also saves all important travel documents such as passports, tickets, and visas in one place so there’s no chance of messing up.

Itineraries created by Kapture CRM

What to Look for in Travel Software: Our Recommendations

A good travel agency software shouldn’t only perform the functions your clients can already easily access online. It should bring out the advantages of traditional agencies and strengthen their operations. It shouldn’t create new obstacles such as complicated interface that will make your agents return to their Excel spreadsheets.

When looking for either accounting, reservation, or marketing software, pay attention to these factors and pick out a tool that will make your business shine. And if you’re going the custom development route, come to your vendor with the following specifications:

Tech support

This not only includes 24/7 chat or call service, but also a knowledge base, FAQs, and tutorials. TripCreator, for example, provides webinar training to all users, while Orioly creates video instructions.

Similar to yours business flow

Thanks to trial options available in many cloud platforms, you can determine which software follows the same processes you and your agents already have.

User-friendly interface

Just like a tool’s workflow should be familiar to your agents, its user experience must use the same familiar language they do.

Automatic confirmations and notifications

Make sure that both agents and clients get notified about main touchpoints of their journeys. While not required, it’s also useful to have a disruption management tool to help travelers already on their trip navigate during flight delays.

Automatic client database creation

Most CRMs create lead and client profiles automatically when you receive a quote request online, with data provided by travelers: names, desired destination and dates, and number of people in the group.

Secure access

Travel agents handle a lot of sensitive and personal client information, so data protection is not optional for travel agency tools. You probably also want to protect information about each agent’s sales from other agents.

Advanced reports

What’s the point in gathering and managing all this data if you can’t draw insights from it? Reporting functions will show you which destinations, dates, seasons, and agents bring you the most value.

In Conclusion

Earlier this year, Forrester reported that technological changes and digital transformation are having the greatest effect on businesses, even more than the political, economic, or competitive climate does. This means that almost every aspect of an organization’s growth is driven by technology. Software helps us run businesses more effectively, make smarter decisions, access our clients more freely. Here, adopting enhancing technology is not simply a suggestion, but a vital action that will help you stay afloat.

Traditional travel agencies are still in demand for certain customers and in some markets, but it won’t be long before OTAs expand their influence and all travelers will be able to easily plan their vacations anywhere. Making your travel agency innovative, empowering it with automation software that allows your agents to spend less time on paperwork and scheduling, will keep your business thriving for years to come.